Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Living


'THE GOOD FIGHT': OUT IN THE OPEN

Sen. Harry Reid reveals personal details, doesn't mince words in new book

Anyone looking for a hint as to whom Sen. Harry Reid supports in the Democratic primary won't find one in his new book "The Good Fight: Hard Lessons from Searchlight to Washington."

The senate majority leader praises both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama in print, never giving so much as a clue as to whom he prefers for the nominee.


Most Popular Stories
  • MIKE WEATHERFORD: Days of markups coming to end?
  • BARGAIN HUNTERS: Early birds often catch the best buys at garage sales
  • BAZAARS: Consumers, charities benefit from sales at holiday bazaars
  • THE R-J GOES TO A PARTY: UNLV Foundation's dinner honors donors
  • HUMAN MATTERS: Text messaging and love can be a tricky combination
  • LEGENDARY LAS VEGAS HEADLINERS: RUSTY WARREN: Life of the Party
  • GARDENING: Use softball-sized 'brain fruit' to help ward off bugs
  • LIFE ON THE COUCH: 'Married ... With Children' stars break from Bundy personas
  • TRIP OF THE WEEK: Grapevine Canyon great spot for history, recreation
  • NFL FOOTBALL: LINE UP FOR A NEW SEASON




  • How he plans to cast his superdelegate vote may remain a mystery, but Reid reveals something else, something politicians usually shy away from revealing: himself.

    Throughout his 291-page book, written with Mark Warren, Reid paints a vivid portrait of his life, even the hard stuff, from his hardscrabble beginnings in the little mining town of Searchlight to his Washington, D.C., days as one of the most powerful men in the world.

    Those who know nothing of Reid beyond his title, hometown and nickname "Pinky," will learn more from his book than how he feels about President George W. Bush. Reid reveals things about himself that he calls "surprisingly hard for me to say," writing about his parents' drinking; his father's occasional abuse of his mother; and the privation of a childhood that served as the foundation for his American rags-to-riches story.

    Reid's not the sort of man who keeps a journal, beyond the diary he says he kept during his first year as a member of the House of Representatives in 1983 and the sporadic entries he has made since. The book's material came from talks with Warren, his co-writer, about what would be interesting to include.

    "It was very therapeutic for me to do this," Reid said during a recent interview. "It was therapeutic for me to go back to some of these things I haven't gone back to."

    Reid talked to his two brothers about what he planned to write, because some things were from a traumatic period in their lives. One particularly difficult story he recounts in the book was the time he and his younger brother, Larry, kept their father from beating their mother. He was about 14.

    "He was hurting my mother and I said, 'Larry, let's take him,' " Reid recalled. "We didn't hurt him, but we sure took him down. ... That was hard to do, to talk about some of those things publicly."

    Though it seems his childhood had the makings of an unhappy one, Reid said it wasn't. There were unhappy moments; for instance, few kids hope their parents run out of money but Reid did because it meant they couldn't buy alcohol. But he added he always felt that his parents cared about him and his brothers.

    He decided to write the book now because, he said, so many people have moved to Nevada since he was first elected to the Senate in 1986; Reid wants them to know the history of the man who represents them in Washington.

    Reid doesn't recount much about his legislative record; that's a book for another time, he said. But chapters about his past are alternated with chapters about the present, including recent battles with Bush over Social Security, judicial appointees and the Iraq war.

    He doesn't mince words, either. History will remember Bush as the worst president, ever, Reid said.

    And, when asked about regrets, he doesn't hesitate to admit he has them.

    "One thing that jumps out at me: During the run-up to the war, I wish I asked more questions. I should have done that," he said. "I will always regret not having asked more questions."

    Reporter Sonya Padgett can be reached at spadgett@reviewjournal.com or at 380-4564.

    EXCERPT

    I guess some people might consider it to be kind of an unusual background, but this is where I developed my values. Much attention is paid in public life to the importance of the collection of attributes that we call character. Somewhat less attention is devoted to consideration of where character is born. But I suppose you could say that Searchlight gives the lie to some of the prevailing theories. I am here as a witness to say that character, and values, come from places you wouldn't necessarily think to look. Because some of the men and women of greatest character that I will ever meet in my life came from this place of hard rocks and inhospitable soil.

    Trace the footsteps back far enough in anyone's story and you'll find a pioneer. These are the pioneers in my story. Why they came here to Searchlight is rather easy to understand; why they stayed and persevered is maybe a little harder. Mining the earth is just about the hardest job under the sun, and when the returns begin to dwindle, the gold is less plentiful, the checks start to bounce -- I guess it might seem to a hard-rock miner like my father that the earth itself is fighting back, exacting its revenge.

    Like a lot of young people, I was, quite frankly, embarrassed about my home, my family, where I came from. And it wasn't until much later in my life that I came to the realization that who I was, who I am, is best understood by looking at the tiny high-desert town of Searchlight.

    It took me years to come to this, because that part of my life I had always put away somewhere. I didn't want anyone to know that I came from that little place that only had one teacher and no indoor toilets. That wasn't something that I would ever talk about. But as time went on, I was drawn back to my hometown, and I started talking about it. This awareness, of course, is not unique. We all have our homecomings, and this was mine. I suppose when you leave a place, reject it, you begin to see it clearly, maybe for the first time. You begin to hear its voices, and maybe even appreciate what it was you were so determined to leave.

    My temporary estrangement from my hometown when I was a younger man has its roots in many of the things that I now love most about Searchlight. In modern-day America, it was remote, very quiet, an outpost from the complicated world. Its physical desolation was, and is, stunningly beautiful. And the people there are special characters.

    When I was a boy, we had a burly lawman in town, a deputy sheriff named John Silveria. He was known and feared for his toughness. He didn't worry about being nice. If you got out of line, Big John served as judge, jury, parole and probation officer all in one. But he was the object of more hero worship than fear. Every kid in Searchlight seemed to want to be like him.

    But it wasn't Big John who made sure that my life of crime was brief. It was Willie Martello, the whoremonger. It went like this: When I was in high school, sophomore or junior year, a friend of mine named Ron McAllister and I came over from Henderson, and we were kicking around in Searchlight, with not much to do, when we noticed cases of redeemable bottles stacked up behind a casino. Well, we looked at them and we saw dollar signs.

    We just stole them, as many as we could carry, a case of them, two cases. The perfect crime committed in broad daylight. The next time I saw Willie, he had a serious expression on his face that I wasn't used to seeing. He looked at me and said: "You know, I saw you steal those bottles, so I could have gotten you in big trouble. Pinky, you should never steal anything from anybody. I didn't get you in trouble because I think you could amount to something. Don't you do stuff like that."

    And I remembered that always. It was a good, lasting lesson for me. It may sound unusual, but I didn't learn many of those kinds of lessons from my parents. They never taught me things about basic honesty -- maybe that's why I had to learn about it from the whoremonger.

    But this lesson my mother did teach me, and it's the most important thing I've ever learned: She taught me to have confidence when sometimes I had no business having confidence. She taught me that no one was better than me, even if it wasn't true. She taught me that I could handle anything that the world could throw at me, whatever it might be.

    Reprinted from "The Good Fight" by Sen. Harry Reid (Putnam) Copyright © 2008 by Harry Reid.
    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 3 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    Bill Sharkey wrote on May 07, 2008 04:27 PM: I plan to buy and read the book. I remember reporting depositions for Harry, and "socializing" with Ron and Larry a few times. I'm sure the book is a good read for anyone who has lived in Vegas long enough to remember Reid and Alverson.
    p.s. Shame on the coward who wrote under the name Nancy Pelosi; you're not qualified to carry Harry's laundry.


    Nancy Pelosi wrote on May 06, 2008 01:43 PM: Dear Harry,

    We know the only reason your father blew his brains out is because he had a pathetic son like you! Maybe you can follow in your father's footsteps.

    Did you write how your mother worked in the Searchlight brothels too?!


    Nancy Mancilla wrote on May 06, 2008 07:18 AM: As a native Nevadan who left to pursue an education and opportunities that I could eventually re-apply to my home state, I can't be more impressed by Senator Harry Reid's continued to commitement to the state and its people. The state has transformed so repidly and most of its new inhabitants are unable to imagine the history that Harry Reid has experienced. Great job Harry!